IWC Watches

The International Watch Company (IWC)
was born in 1868 in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, the brainchild of an ambitious American and
a Swiss industrialist. From the
beginning, this new watchmaking enterprise focused on
creating new standards in time-keeping technology and design. Their first pocket watches
were characterized by a wealth of advanced technical features  many of which are
still used in pocket watches today. By 1898, the company had begun to adapt smaller
versions of its pocket watch movements to wrist watches and introduced its first designed
wristwatch in 1900.

Over the years, IWC has launched a series
of collections widely regarded as some of the finest time-keeping instruments the world
has ever seen. Prized by collectors and connoisseurs, IWC watches are engraved with a
unique number and calibre type. Its reference number, calibre, material, case number,
delivery date, purchaser or dealer name is then recorded for posterity in ledgers kept at
the companys headquarters in Schaffhausen. Vintage IWCs can be traced back to their
original owners. Also at headquarters is the Pharmacy where IWC keeps,
catalogued and sorted, a minimum 30 years inventory of parts for its distinctive
collections. In one hallowed corner is the shrine, comprised of tall chests
with multiple drawers holding rare parts for vintage IWC watches, some dating back as far
as 1886.

The most famous creation of IWC is the
Portuguese watch, originally commissioned in 1930 by two Portuguese
businessmen. IWCs challenge was to craft a wristwatch with a stainless steel case
that possessed all the qualities of a marine chronometer. Today, the
Portuguese watch is one of IWCs cornerstone collections, available in a
split-second chronograph in rose gold, steel and platinum. The first Portuguese automatic
was launched in 1996. But the Portuguese was not the only break-through design in the IWC
stable. IWC is also well known for the quality design, precision movements, manufacturing
excellence and watchmaking innovation of its Grande Complication, DaVinci, Novecento,
Portofino, Ingenieur, Pilots Watches (the Mark series), and GST collections.